S
SalarySorted

Your details

£/hr

= £35,360 per year

40h
1h40h standard80h
0%
0%30%

The standard code for most UK employees. You receive the full £12,570 personal allowance tax-free.

Your breakdown

Annual gross

£35,360

Annual take-home

£28,979

Monthly take-home

£2,415

Weekly take-home

£557

Effective rate18.0%
Marginal rate28%
Tax bandBasic rate
Take-homeIncome TaxNI

Based on your inputs. Actual pay may vary depending on your holiday entitlement, contract terms and employer. For guidance only.

Gross salary
£35,360
Income TaxBasic rate
-£4,558
National Insurance
-£1,823
Take-home pay
£28,979

In plain English

At £17.00 per hour for 40 hours over 52 weeks, your gross annual salary is £35,360 in England and Wales. You are in the Basic rate band, paying £4,558 in income tax and £1,823 in National Insurance. Your take-home is £28,979 per year — £2,415 per month or £557 per week. Your effective deduction rate is 18.0%. An extra £1 per hour (£2,080 more per year) would add approximately £582 to your take-home.

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What if...

£17 an hour after tax -- 2026/27 breakdown

Hourly rate

£17

Annual take-home

£28,979

Monthly take-home

£2,415

Weekly take-home

£557

Deductions at a glance

Gross annual£35,360
Income Tax (20%)-£4,558
National Insurance (8%)-£1,823
Take-home pay£28,979

£17 an hour equates to £35,360 a year, which is around the UK median full-time salary. This hourly rate is common in skilled administration, IT first-line support, junior accounting roles, experienced trades and many public-sector positions. It is a rate where careful financial planning -- particularly around pension contributions -- makes a meaningful difference to long-term outcomes.

Working 40 hours a week for 52 weeks a year at £17 an hour, your take-home pay after income tax and National Insurance is £28,979 per year -- that is £2,415 per month or £557 per week. All taxable income falls within the basic rate band, so every pound of taxable earnings above your personal allowance is taxed at 20%. Based on 40 hours per week, 52 weeks per year. Use our hourly pay calculator to adjust for your hours.

Even at this hourly rate, auto-enrolment pension contributions are worth taking seriously. If your employer offers salary sacrifice, contributions come out before tax and National Insurance are calculated, so the real cost to your take-home is lower than the headline figure suggests. Starting early and increasing contributions whenever you receive a pay rise can make a significant difference over a working lifetime.

Frequently asked questions

How much is £17 an hour after tax per month?

At £17 an hour working 40 hours a week and 52 weeks a year, your monthly take-home pay in 2026/27 is £2,415. Your annual take-home is £28,979 and your weekly take-home is £557. These figures are for England and Wales using the standard 1257L tax code with no pension contributions or student loan.

How much income tax do I pay on £17 an hour?

On a gross annual salary of £35,360 (£17 for 40 hours over 52 weeks), you pay no income tax on the first £12,570 (your personal allowance). The remaining £22,790 is taxed at the basic rate of 20%, giving an income tax bill of £4,558 per year.

How much National Insurance do I pay on £17 an hour?

National Insurance is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270. On a gross annual salary of £35,360, you pay 8% of £22,790, coming to £1,823 per year. There are no NI contributions on income below £12,570.

Is £17 an hour a good wage in the UK?

£17 an hour equates to £35,360 a year -- above the UK median full-time salary of approximately £35,000. With a monthly take-home of £2,415, this provides a comfortable income across most parts of the UK, though the cost of living varies significantly between regions.

How can pension contributions affect my take-home on £17 an hour?

Salary sacrifice pension contributions reduce your gross income before income tax and National Insurance are applied. At £17 an hour, each pound contributed to your pension saves you approximately 28p (20p income tax plus 8p National Insurance) compared with taking it as pay. A 5% contribution on £35,360 would cost you £1,768 gross but considerably less in actual take-home pay. Use the calculator above to model the impact.